
The Yukon River Canoeing Expedition
The Woodland Ways Yukon River Canoeing Expedition is a long-form wilderness journey through one of North America’s last truly remote river corridors. This is a classic expedition in the truest sense of the word—measured not in moments, but in days, distance, rhythm, and gradual immersion.
Over approximately 14–15 days on the water, participants travel by Canadian canoe along the longest river in the Yukon and the third-longest river system in North America. The expedition follows the historic route between Whitehorse and Dawson City, covering an extraordinary 445 miles (715 km) of boreal wilderness, mountain horizons, and glacial-fed water.
This is the same river corridor travelled by Indigenous peoples for millennia, and later by tens of thousands of gold rush stampeders seeking fortune in an unforgiving land. Today, it offers something far rarer—space, perspective, and a return to purposeful movement through wild country.
The Woodland Ways Yukon River Canoeing Expedition is a long-form wilderness journey through one of North America’s last truly remote river corridors. This is a classic expedition in the truest sense of the word—measured not in moments, but in days, distance, rhythm, and gradual immersion.
Over approximately 14–15 days on the water, participants travel by Canadian canoe along the longest river in the Yukon and the third-longest river system in North America. The expedition follows the historic route between Whitehorse and Dawson City, covering an extraordinary 445 miles (715 km) of boreal wilderness, mountain horizons, and glacial-fed water.
This is the same river corridor travelled by Indigenous peoples for millennia, and later by tens of thousands of gold rush stampeders seeking fortune in an unforgiving land. Today, it offers something far rarer—space, perspective, and a return to purposeful movement through wild country.
Original: $3,232.00
-70%$3,232.00
$969.60Description
The Woodland Ways Yukon River Canoeing Expedition is a long-form wilderness journey through one of North America’s last truly remote river corridors. This is a classic expedition in the truest sense of the word—measured not in moments, but in days, distance, rhythm, and gradual immersion.
Over approximately 14–15 days on the water, participants travel by Canadian canoe along the longest river in the Yukon and the third-longest river system in North America. The expedition follows the historic route between Whitehorse and Dawson City, covering an extraordinary 445 miles (715 km) of boreal wilderness, mountain horizons, and glacial-fed water.
This is the same river corridor travelled by Indigenous peoples for millennia, and later by tens of thousands of gold rush stampeders seeking fortune in an unforgiving land. Today, it offers something far rarer—space, perspective, and a return to purposeful movement through wild country.






















